Dallas, TX
17 restaurants in Dallas-Fort Worth add $1 Ukraine donation to every bill
Prospects at Flying Fish, Flying Saucer, Rodeo Goat and Meddlesome Moth eating places throughout the nation will discover an added $1 donation on the backside of each invoice.
The additional greenback can be robotically added. It’s a part of restaurateur Shannon Wynne’s effort to lift $250,000 in two months for World Central Kitchen’s on-the-ground humanitarian efforts in Ukraine. The non-profit was created by chef José Andrés, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee and the person The Dallas Morning Information has known as essentially the most lauded chef on the planet.
His World Central Kitchen has been feeding victims of crises throughout the globe since 2010.
“We will’t simply sit right here and eat our burgers. We will’t simply sit right here and drink our beer,” says Wynne in regards to the warfare in Ukraine.
He owns simply over 30 eating places nationwide, and almost all of them can be enacting the $1-per-bill donation. Seventeen of these eating places are in North Texas.
The added donation can be defined on a flier positioned on every desk, and staff can be carrying new uniforms that present the restaurant’s insignia atop the blue and yellow Ukrainian flag.
Those that don’t wish to give $1 can ask for his or her a reimbursement, Wynne says.
“We had fairly a number of discussions in our operations assembly about any potential fallout from this. I lastly simply mentioned, ‘I don’t actually care if there’s any fallout. I simply don’t. Inform me the place the argument is just not to do that,’” Wynne says.
“In the event that they don’t be ok with it, we’ll give them again their $1.”
The hassle is completely different from one other added value clients are seeing on some restaurant receipts: service charges. A service price is a sum of cash tacked on to a restaurant invoice, often 3% to 10% of the full sale, that goes again to the restaurant — typically, to un-tipped kitchen staff. We began to see service charges on payments at Dallas-Fort Price eating places through the pandemic, and it was used as a method to incentivize staff and to gather a number of additional bucks amid inflated meals prices.
Whereas service charges go to staff (and, typically, to restaurant operators), Wynne’s $1 price goes to World Central Kitchen, a non-profit. He confirms that not one of the cash goes again to the restaurant or its staff.
After the Russian invasion of Ukraine started in late February 2022, some huge restaurant chains like Pizza Hut, McDonald’s and Starbucks responded by halting growth in Russia. Different Dallas-area corporations pulled Russian merchandise off their cabinets, however only a few of them had been really promoting Russian-made objects. This effort from Flying Saucer, Flying Fish, Rodeo Goat and Meddlesome Moth — all of that are owned by Wynne — is among the largest Ukraine fundraising targets from a neighborhood restaurant group thus far in 2022.
The $1 donations are per invoice, not per individual. They are going to be collected at Meddlesome Moth in Dallas; at Flying Saucers in Irving, Fort Price and Rockwall; at Rodeo Goats in Dallas, Fort Price, Irving, Plano and Rockwall; and at Flying Fishes in Addison, Arlington, Fort Price, Dallas, Garland and Plano.
For extra meals information, comply with Sarah Blaskovich on Twitter at @sblaskovich.
Dallas, TX
Cowboys vs Giants on Thanksgiving: Dallas is favored after weeks as underdog
The Dallas Cowboys got back in the win column with a surprising upset over the Washington Commanders. Surprising in the fact that Dallas won, and surprising in that it was one of the crazier games seen in a while. The fourth-quarter alone was worth the price of admission.
The Cowboys were able to get their win even though they were roughly 10.5-point underdogs going into the game. Dallas has been the underdog for a while now, but this week they are favored. With their rivals in the NFC East, the New York Giants, coming to town on turkey day, Dallas finds themselves as 3.5-point favorites in the FanDuel odds.
The Giants appear to be falling apart after cutting QB Daniel Jones, getting rocked by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers 30-7, then having multiple players calling the team’s effort ‘soft’ and questioning the game plan.
Could the Cowboys actually go on a winning streak? And how does this sit with a fanbase firmly looking toward draft position?
Dallas, TX
CeeDee Lamb made NFL history on Sunday
During the first quarter on Sunday afternoon against the Washington Commanders, Dallas Cowboys wide receiver CeeDee Lamb set an impressive bit of NFL history.
By recording his fourth reception in the game (CeeDee got a lot of work early if that is not obvious) Lamb recorded four receptions for the 44th consecutive game. That is the longest streak in NFL history, according to the Cowboys’ public relations team.
CeeDee Lamb (@_CeeDeeThree) has recorded four receptions in the first quarter. Lamb has recorded at least four receptions in 44 consecutive games, surpassing Michael Thomas for the longest such streak in NFL history.
— Dallas Cowboys Public Relations (@DallasCowboysPR) November 24, 2024
Lamb surpassed former New Orleans Saints wide receiver Michael Thomas to set the record all to himself. The impressive thing about a streak like this is that it crosses over multiple seasons and in CeeDee’s case even multiple quarterbacks.
Obviously this season has been a bit tough for the Cowboys, but seeing CeeDee continually perform is a bright spot throughout it all. Kudos and congratulations to him, hopefully there is a lot more history on the way for him and the team in sunnier days.
Dallas, TX
Dallas police pension won big against the city, but there is still room for agreement
In August, when the Dallas Police and Fire Pension System filed a lawsuit against City Hall, we winced in concern.
The difference boiled down to which entity, the city or the pension board, had the authority to send a plan to the Texas Legislature to get the badly underfunded system back on track.
Well, the pension system won that fight in district court in Travis County. The plan it has crafted would offer substantially more funding to the pension system, with cost-of-living increases and a reduction in employee contributions in later years.
The city could drag this through an appeal, but as things stand, the pension system’s plan would become the required funding formula.
Most readers know the pension system is underfunded by more than $3 billion. The difference here boils down to how much additional money the city will contribute per year to get us back on track. Under the pension system’s plan, it would be millions more per year.
But this is a wholly negotiable matter. Two sides have different figures in mind. The sides need to hash out those differences in a way that ensures the city is aligned with a 2017 state law that was passed for the express purpose of getting this pension funded.
There are serious people on both sides. What we need now is a leader at City Hall who has the standing to get this done. Normally, that would be the mayor, but our mayor hasn’t been doing the hard work at City Hall for a long time and we don’t expect him to start now. It could be the city manager, but that job is in the hands of an interim manager now.
Mayor Pro Tem Tennell Atkins has been doing the heavy lifting for the city, but whether he can lead the city’s side in negotiations is unclear.
All we know is that there is an opportunity for a solution that gets this thing out of court and a solid plan to the Legislature that, yes, includes sacrifices but that also stops the drumbeat about this important public benefit.
Someone needs to get on the phone, book a conference room, order some takeout and work the spreadsheets. There is time, but the clock is ticking.
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